1 / 21

WOOD

WOOD. ACS-206 WEEK 6 UNIT 17 CE-ME-MECE-MSE. Categories of Wood. There are mainly two categories of wood : 1. Hardwood 2. S oftwood. Categories of Wood. Hardwood comes from deciduous , or hardwood, trees. Decidous trees lose their leaves in the fall.

diane
Télécharger la présentation

WOOD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WOOD ACS-206 WEEK 6 UNIT 17 CE-ME-MECE-MSE

  2. Categories of Wood • There are mainly two categories of wood: 1. Hardwood 2. Softwood

  3. Categories of Wood • Hardwood comes from deciduous, or hardwood, trees. • Decidous trees lose their leaves in the fall. • The tree on the right is a hardwood tree.

  4. Categories of Wood • Softwood comes from evergreen, or softwood, trees. • Evergreen trees keep their leaves all year. • The tree on the right is a softwood tree.

  5. Categories of Wood • In engineering, wood can be categorized as solid wood and engineered wood.

  6. Categories of Wood solid wood coffee table • Solid wood – softwood or hardwood that has been sawn into specific shapes and sizes, but whose natural structure, consisting of grain and knots, remains intact.

  7. Categories of Wood grain

  8. Categories of Wood engineered flooring • Engineered wood– made by bonding (sticking together) layers of solid softwood or harwood, or by mixing quantities of wood particles and bonding them with resin.

  9. Solid Structural Timber • Solid structural timber = wood intended to support loads in a structure.

  10. Solid Structural Timber Timber is cut to the required section – the width and depth that determine its cross-section – at a sawmill, where a range of section sizes are produced. section sawmill

  11. Solid Structural Timber Timber from sawmills is generally supplied in rough-sawn sections. This refers to the surface texture produced by sawing timber with a circular saw. rough-sawn timber circular saw

  12. Solid Structural Timber • If the timber needs to have a smooth finish – for example, because it will be visible in the structure – it can subsequently be planed to smooth its surface.

  13. Solid Structural Timber • Because the strength of wood varies, structural timber must be stress-graded. This means its strength is tested in order to give it a stress grade – a standard strength value which an engineer can use for design calculations.

  14. Solid Structural Timber Timber can be mechanically stress-graded, where its strength is checked by machine. It can also be visually stress graded, where the wood is examined by an inspector who looks for potential wekanesses – in particular, the position of the knots. mechanical stress grading visual stress grading

  15. Engineered Wood • Engineered wood covers a range of softwood and hardwood materials. It includes: • Cheap, low strength boards such as particle board and medium density fibreboard (MDF) • Stronger boards such as orientated strand board (OSB) and plywood • Glulams (glue laminated sections)

  16. Engineered Wood • Particleboard(or chipboard) is a multi-purpose material and one of the most widely-used wood-based panels. Particleboard is an engineered wood-based product manufactured from wood chip particles and a synthetic binding resin. It is formed in a press using heat and pressure.

  17. Engineered Wood • Medium density fibreboard (MDF) is a composite panel product typically consisting of cellulosic fibers combined with a synthetic resin or other suitable bonding system and joined together under heat and pressure.The surface of MDF is flat, smooth, uniform, dense and free of knots and grain patterns.

  18. Engineered Wood • Orientated strand board (OSB) is made from strands of wood bonded with resin. OSB is widely used in residential and commercial construction.

  19. Engineered Wood • Plywood consists of several plies (layers) of solid wood, bonded so that the grain of each ply runs at 90 degrees to that of the adjacent plies, to provide increased strength.

  20. Engineered Wood • Glued laminated timber (glulam) is an industrial wooden product for load bearing purposes. Glulam consists of at least three dried softwood boards, which are flatwise glued together.

More Related